David Lau's
poetry and essays have appeared widely (in Boston Review, The American Reader, Armed Cell, New Orleans Review, Los Angeles Review of Books, and New Left Review). His first book of
poetry, Virgil and the Mountain Cat,
was described by the Believer as "simultaneously creative and destructive
… grounded in—or rather, trapped by—the present." Commune Editions will
publish his second book this August; Still Dirtyfinds its bearings in the political struggles after the economic
crisis. In 2009, he was chosen as a Poetry Society of America New American
Poet. Lau is also the author of the chapbook Bad Opposites (speCt!, 2012). With
Cal Bedient, he edits the journal Lana Turner. A graduate of UCLA and the Iowa Writers' Workshop, he is a lecturer
at UC Santa Cruz, where he first began teaching in 2005. He has also taught
poetry at UC Berkeley and in the MFA program at Saint Mary's College.

Wendy Trevino was born & raised in the Rio Grande Valley of South Texas. She now
lives and works in San Francisco. Her chapbook 128-131 was published by Perfect
Lovers Press in 2013. Her chapbook BRAZILIAN IS NOT A RACE was just recently
published by Commune Editions, and Krupskaya Books will publish her chapbook
Cruel Work later in 2016. Her poems have appeared in various print and online
journals, including Abraham Lincoln, Armed Cell, the Capilano Review, LIES,
Macaroni Necklace, Mondo Bummer, ELDERLY and Open House.

Jasper Bernes is author of two books of poetry, Starsdown (2007)
and We Are Nothing and So Can You(2015). He has recently completed a scholarly book, The Work of Art in the Age of
Deindustrialization (Stanford University Press, forthcoming), about the
role poetry plays in the postindustrial restructuring of labor. Poems, essays, and other writings
can be found in Modern Language
Quarterly, Radical Philosophy,
Endnotes, Lana Turner, The American Reader, Critical Inquiry and
elsewhere. Together with Juliana Spahr and Joshua Clover, he edits Commune Editions. He lives in Berkeley with his family.